Tuesday, November 30, 2010

To cineaist and documentary makers, Vertov is synonymous with Shakespeare for film.

His Kino-eye Man with a Movie Camera (1929) is an epochal piece of work, a ten commandments with Vertov pre-empting Chartlon Heston many years in advance.

Except Vertov's grandisoseness exists behind the lens, than in front of it.

We know much of what Vertov has done for film and docs, but what about videojournalism or meta-video? I'm increasingly substituting meta-video for videojournalism, which is disappearing into tautology.

Why? Because everything in video delivering factivity can inherit videojournalism as a category. What started off as a nouvelle language for some has been subsumed into the fold of video-everything.

This isn't a criticism, but an observation that elides videojournalism a grand theory approach - a conversation for another time perhaps.

Vertov today
So back to Vertov. The film starts with the bold title, this is an experiment and the statement it will be free of the use of inter titles, which held cinema together in the soundless days, adopted by photography later as captions in photo essays.

The film is many things, but for me it's an Encyclopedia in the language of (meda-video) videojournalism revealing a number of processes.

Filming technique

Film language

Position of the cameraman, Vertov's brother, whilst shooting.

Effects

A compendium for modern films.

In Man with a Movie Camera, there are the obvious motifs, scene settings lifted by other films, such as

24

The Matrix

King Kong

Mr Fox

Gladiator

And any film with a train

Though free of narrative, it's possible to construct one, but really that's no bother. The films shows up somewhat embarrassingly for our videojouralism times what was achieved in 1929.

Claymation effects, Freeze-frame film as photos; symbolism in video making as a merry go round and wall of death rider interchange shots.

The inter cut between mechanisation, against the ordinariness of daily life (shaving and washing) a baby pushing out from his mothers; and a fair smattering of nudity - soft flesh -Vertov knew what sells.

Vertov knew what was going to sell: films of social purpose. In those days the expense of it all meant docs were reserved for big themed subjects. Housing Problems - Griersonian docs came 6 years later.

The cascading score (not the one playing but the notes he left for composers) set against a game of football is mesmerizing. We get the obligatory behind-the-lines shots, though much cleaner than today's in-the-heavens depiction, and then some tantalising images on the pitch.

Why can't videojournalism's be allowed to film on the field of play whilst Manchester United play Arsenal? Yes it's an absurd thought you might ask, but then why not fix the ref with a head cam, which gives the viewer access to the pitch.

Vertov videojournalism next
That's what Vertov's film is begging us to think.

Then there is the pure poetry of the athletes, high jumping; hurdling, hammer throwing. Women in full grace, men exuding brute strength.

The shots have been slowed down in superslowmo. 1000 frames a second, who knows, but its genius to watch.

Vertov or Kaufman tags his shots ala 24; he hollywoodises his language: shot/reverse/shot.

He hangs off a moving train, and captures the belly of a fast-moving one. You see the mound Kaufman builds to provide the shot. All the while having to handcrank the camera, which in those days lacked electronic motors and was barely entertaining spring-based wound up mechanisms.

Its superb because if you follow the timeline of what he achieved back then working under strenuous conditions (Directors thought him pretentious etc) it deserves to be shown to all vjs, with the caveat - now what would you do?

A favourite repetitive scene for me is watching Kaufman lug his camera and sticks around. The weight of that camera and tripod, hardly mobile, must have been something.

This zoo- approach to film making, which often unveils the artifacts of film making, with the cameraman, soundman in shot, is much used today. Back then he would have been further criticised for dispelling the illusion of film making, much as News makers continue that three-card trick today.

BTW I was watching an entertaining film on billionaire Donald Trump on BBC two days ago, where the director went Vertov - showing a full three-person crew in shot with Trump. One camera at play with no director would have caused its own visual fuss.

Man with a Movie Camera continues its relevance, but for a new generation.

Perhaps it's not so much aping the compendium of his shot list, but providing a new lingua-aesthetic. One in which the psychology of shot juxtaposition, rather than sequence - which often gets lost in translation - is given priority - if not in affective experimental film but also visual narrative driven videojournalism (meta-video) essays.

Find out what the reverential Mark Cousins, writing partner with Kevin Macdonald (Touching the Void Director) Author of Imagining Reality says about digital film and David's work on www.viewmagazine.tv, which starts with a trailer with intelligence chiefs talking about closed and open secrets.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

How to become an instinctive thinker covering breaking news when you're mobile

A couple of days ago working with International Masters students we simulated a breaking news event and drew up a methodology how Social Media with Traditional Media, coupled with user-behaviour enabled us to understand the dynamics of the story. You might want to have a look at that BREAKING NEWS after this present post.

Monday, November 15, 2010

How to become an instinctive thinker covering breaking news when you're mobile

In the term "breaking news"it would not be anomalous to imagine a giant surf set breaking - rolling out a life of its own.

The UK Press Gazette recently reported a group of surfers uncovering a 50ft wave in England, yet refusing to give its exact location. This contested spirit is much the same for the news surfers seeking to break news.

Yet, somehow in our meta data-mined digiworld, breaking news is becoming an irrelevance - at least in the way TV once had the monopoly and practiced its wares.

Not any more - anyone now can break news.

CNN, London, I'm told by a lecturer-colleague no longer invests in the act of "breaking news" being its raison detre.

Breaking News Broken Baudrillard, the late contemporary philosopher might have proclaimed the media's incestuous naval gazing has now seen some sense.

He might add what TV inevitably saw as a form of electronic corporeal voyeurism, the need to get to the scene and flaunt oneself first whilst attempting to ride the wave exclusively is diminishing. Merci Dieu.

Today as part of a Masters lecture over a couple of hours trainee journalists sought to deconstruct this modernistic news parlance.

In 1963 the term would evince a chilling turn, but in the hands of the television supremo Cronkite the most gut-wrenching of news is delivered in a matter-of-fact, unflappered manner.

Contrast this with the many excitable presentations of today, some crassly riddled with bon mots.

Breaking News in the Lecture Room
The lecture room does not do its justice.

Breaking News is truly realised under the intense gaze of the controlled frenzy of the newsroom, where old friendships can be lost in seconds, and where everyone is calling for order in disorder.

Here then is what we devised. A collaborative meme, which I have since added to and hopefully our MAs can modify as well. That I published it gives us all a moment to evaluate its purpose: the lecture gave it much more context.

But when the news doth break, what is one to do? When you're working for an outfit with limited resources how do rise above your station? Also when you break and its an exclusive, how do you manage, control, stay with the story?

Today app-determinism e.g twitter answers some of those questions. But it needs to be buttressed with the old and new . Those old fashion acts include the relentless act of "phone-bashing."

Remember time is the premium commodity. Every second gone, reduces your real-time prowess in driving the story. Like a trader, one minute the stocks up; the next it's down and now you failed to bring it in.

So instinct is crucial. Instinct however is practice learnt.

That means arriving at the point where when the big story happens you get all the elements in a Madhatter row and publish with all the prudence it deserves.

The hacks hacka

ABC Associate Producer David Dunkley Gyimah in the midst of a breaking news story in Johannesburg

David reporting live on the BBC World Service wrapping up Breaking News of the above bomb blast

To the hack in anyone, the breaking news story is or was the supreme Adrenalin rush. My first at a live station, BBC Radio Leicester was in 1991 - the assassination of Rajiv Ghandi.

When the news broke, I was shifting on the Asian network about to go home for the day, with only four other members of staff around to subsequently run a rolling news programme.

I'd had four previous years of radio to give me the confidence of what to do.

Being on air recounting information you reeled of seconds ago only wears the news down - a symptom of 24 hours news. We watch perhaps because of our insatiable appetite and curiosity, goaded by the announcer.."More news soon, meanwhile let's go to our correspondent".

This, and how we now address breaking news in the digi-age is food for this generation, compounded by a myriad of ethical and professional concerns.

Breaking News? More like Constructive for the post-TV age.

How to become an instinctive thinker covering breaking news

1. top zone is white heat hot - an abstraction from Mcluhan. The news is breaking fast
2. The lower zone - the temperature is more tempered. The news gets cycled into the lower zone for the creation of the news feature, whilst attention is still given to the top zone

The one we did not discuss in detail that we'll look at next week will be your reputation. In the event that a news story breaks and you're competing with others, how do you ensure a response from a potential participatory body may depend on the presentation of your reputation.

David Dunkley Gyimah, a senior lecturer at the University of Westminster, and PhD Candidate at SMARTlab University College Dublin is a member of Microbes Mind - a gathering set up by Nasa researcher Zann Gill, which provides provocative questions and answers to scenarios.

Post Script.
Spare a through for a Masters student who knew about the Royal Wedding announcement before its official announcement, but did not break the story for all sorts of ethical reasons, not least though if you break the story, how do you go about managing it.

I ask you to take a look for I'm sure it will have currency for you as well.

I was struck by several things, but these few have left an indelible impression and catalysed me to start scribbling reflexive thoughts in videojournalism - the art of oneness (my pet subject)

Creative Videojournalism Thought (1)

Firstly, made plaintively clear by Sir Ronald that the only way to become a writer is to write.

This is a seemingly torturous mantra to Masters students who I recite to endlessly. WRITE!

Sir Ronald says writing is the equivalent of muscle training for the athlete. The more your write, the more you train yourself.

This act is one that covers many disciplines, such as videojournalism. Cue the only way to become a videojournalist is to shoot. Viewmagazine.tv is my exhibit B for this.

No matter what's done in the classroom, its only in the field where those creative impulses can manifest into a tangible or intangible product to be critiqued.

Creative Videojournalism Thought (2)
Secondly, a statement which Sir Ronald qualifies in his lecture as it could be misunderstood - that is he's not sure screen writing can be taught, but it can be learnt.

There is an element of the philosopher Descartes in this: "I think therefore I am". A statement that hides a deeper truth.

You cannot be taught, but you can learn, but then from whom or what. If you learn from a teacher he or she teaches (you're being taught) - contradicting Sir Ronald's statement.

I am a lecturer and I understand the mechanics and limitations of my teaching. There are rules to guide, which can and should be broken.

Sir Ronald, for instance, takes issue with those creatives talking about the three act movie.

He tells us the 3-Act long perished becoming the 2-Act post 60s or otherwise the classical 5-Act driven by Shakespeare is an alternative option. The formula is but a guide.

In effect Sir Ronald I believe is saying the act of being taught is not a traditional classroom-based event. It involves a performance, an apprenticeship, a journey to make the learning process work, or even more memorable.

From his (screen writing) example of Elle editor Jean-Dominique Bauby’s true story The Diving Bell And The Butterfly (2007) directed by Julian Schnabel, Sir Ronald illustrates how he was influenced by a film made thirty years ago.

The film Lady in the Lake directed by Robert Montgomeryworks off the central character's POV perspective.

Videojournalism Thought (3)
This segues nicely into the final truism I take from Sir Rowland's lecture, and I'll paraphrase it in my own way.

"I know nothing about videojournalism. I did not witness its inception".

But what I do know, (this phraseology lifted from Sir Ronald's lecture) is how I see my videojournalism. How I define "my" videojournalism that has come through experience and learning, through pedagogy and the refinement over time through open discussions and trial and error.

Like the writer we all have a uniqueness for the way we permutate letters, syntax and grammar. T'is the same with video as a language. ( I have come by philosophers who discount the idea that film is a language).

Like any creative journey there's years of getting it wrong, and then occasionally right and then more rights than wrong hopefully. The creative learning process then is the permission to experiment.

And even when you get it wrong ( as some of my students might note ( see below), I will often shriek with delight, because that is a profound learning curve. You're inclined not to repeat it.

Though I admit I would rather after a few wrongs you begin to get it right.

And here in my videojournalism world I have in recent years come to believe another process: that videojournalism whilst a solo affair should not necessarily be enacted as a solo affair.

That incongruously whilst seeking an autership, video as a creative medium works as a collaboration - whether with your subject, or more so with another creative.

The common wealth of video is one of the our contemporary break throughs in language-evolution.

Previous ventures involved writing e.g. pamphlets, then essays, books and literary scores, before at some point arriving at the stage of the screen writer.

The Screen writer is a curious being: a cinematographer without a camera. He or she prods at a page as if it would animate.

The director is, more often than not, an actor without a physical presence with the mis-en-scene thrown in for good measure. Then there's the talent, actors et al. Sir Ronald explains the collaborative nature of film making.

Videojournalism is just as curious (and that won't be the first time I'm saying this). We start from a different position of being self-expressive and then like the creative writer, at some point seek company. Doesn't always have to happen, as with artists, but it most certainly bolsters the creative process.

Which is why I'm so keen on an association to bring videojournalists together to match make at the Southbank Centre, to encourage a professional sharing and learning process that gives room for journalism and art to rework themselves.

And to think this reflection emerged from a tweet from Bafta :) A ripple in a pond. Now I'm off to watch the rest of the lectures.

David, a senior lecturer and artist in residence at the Southbank Centre is a juror at the RTS for the third year running on the panel for innovative journalism

Tuesday, November 02, 2010

On BBC Radio 4 this morning, the Today programme, an interview with the Times newspaper's James Harding defending its paywall strategy.

So it might, for a google of Times Newspaper and paywall reveals a spate of negative press and comments. It won't work, it's pointless, the cost damages the Times' growth are the vein of the criticisms.

But this interview, which is worth listening with Editor revealed some interesting figures.

It also aired a logic that argues the conversation has yet to break out of collateral damage blame. It's to early to call this action said Harding, which I agree.

A look at trends and decision which go against the status quo tend to reveal widespread antiviews.

Here, Harding says he is encouraged by its figure of 100,000 readers, which Steve Hewlitt, a media expert agreed had merit. Depends how you look at added Hewlitt

The Net's echo chamber ensured that while their copy was behind a paywall, they were still being talked about. The 100,000 figure appears to pan out at 20m UKP in advertising, compared with the Guardian's 40m UKP for its open access.

However, just as the FT has claimed, and reiterated by the Times, the IPad and Kindle is revolutionising the printed word.

We created a grave error admitted Harding when we gave our copy away for free. Will others follow behind the paywall asked the BBC presenter, Evan Davies.

Hewlitt was unsure, but the IPad/ Kindle offered an intriging future. I wrote earlier in a post. This is a waiting game of deeper pockets versus the possibility of a turn around in the logic journalism is free.

That does not undo my firm acknowledgement of the Net's free and open access approach, but that a new type of journalism in apps and need-to-know info may redeem the printed word's perceptive premium: some things cost.

Monday, November 01, 2010

City University London conference on Local TelevisionFriday November 5 2010 (0930-1530) at The Performance Space, College Building, City University London, St John’s Street, EC1V 4PB.

0900-0930 Registration and coffee

0930-0935

Introduction and Welcome by Professor George Brock, Head of the Journalism Department at City University and former Managing Editor of the Times.

Session One (0935 -1000)

Local media, communities and citizenship –the big picture.

A panel of Jon Zeff (Director of Media, DCMS), Prof Roy Greenslade (City University and media commentator), Peter Williams (United for Local TV) and Prof Natalie Fenton (lead author of ‘Meeting the news needs of local communities’) discuss how the state of the UK’s local media fits into the wider debates about local democracy and the future of public service broadcasting.

Moderator George Brock

Session Two (1000-1030)

Is Local Television a threat, an opportunity or an irrelevance to other local media?

George Brock chairs and Lord Wills (formerly Labour MP for Swindon North and a former Director of Juniper Productions) leads off a debate about the best way forward for local content and civic activism.

Session Eleven 1445-1515

Where does the Local Television debate leave news and current affairs in the Nations and Regions ?

Rob Woodward –CEO of STV

Richard Hooper – Chairman of DCMS IFNC panel

Dave Rushton –Institute of Local TV

Glyn Mathias- Welsh member of the DCMS IFNC panel

Mary McAnally- President of the National Consumer Federation and formerly MD of Meridian Broadcasting.

Moderator Stewart Purvis

Session Twelve 1515-1530

The last word

Claire Enders talks with Lis Howell

CONFERENCE ENDS 1530

P.S If you're going, hope to see you there and chat. I'll be sharing my experience in the 10.30 - 11.00 session

Channel 4's Jon Snow comments on David work as "original".

Twitter Updates

Twitter Updates

RTS Awards

What my blog is for

This blog is a distillation of broad concepts, academia and commercial practice. Please log onto Viewmagazine.tv where this experience is extended..

Viewmag blog is praised by blogger

Our editors recently reviewed your blog and have given it an 8.3 score out of (10) in the Technology category of Blogged.com.
This is quite an achievement! We evaluated your blog based on the following criteria: Frequency of Updates, Relevance of Content, Site Design, and Writing Style.
Please accept my congratulations on a blog well-done!!
www.blogged.com

Professor and Blogger Jeff Jarvis on David

Nice things said about David's work and training

David is a trend-setter who is always one step ahead of the game in terms of journalism, video and digital media. He is inspiring and an innovator and I am constantly in awe at what he achieves and ideas he comes up with. He’s also an excellent teacher and mentor. I look forward to seeing what he comes up with next!

David has touched a creative level that deserves an Oscar. More importantly he is paving the way for future journalists and will radically change the way we see news. A truly inspirational and dynamic character.

I presented viewmagazine.tv at a recent company meeting at NBC Universal for executives in digital media. This high-level media crowd was in stunned and amazed at the creativity and intellectual complexity of this dynamic website. A winner!

David has been changing the game since long before I met him. His work is always on the bleeding edge, his storytelling and design sense is always fantastic. This guy could make a story about paying your taxes look great and catch your interest!

David and I have never met, but he has been a cyber mentor to me for the past 18 months and has been a wealth of “thinking outside the box” information on the solo video journalist paradigm that has helped me form what I do and why.

With urgency, style, and provocation, David delivers credible and well-presented news stories. His work is as serious as it is entertaining. He pulls us into his “experiments” and leaves us to judge the approach for ourselves. It’s hard not to be influenced by his energy and enthusiasm.

A life-changing tutor and mentor - who ABSOLUTELY changed the world of video for my group of new VJs. His work is as inspiring as his teaching methods, and constantly challenging the best way to achieve results. His website and blog and compelling, must-follow sites for anyone working with video or multimedia on the web.

Subscribe To My Podcast and via google

Where you're from

Max hits

Subscribe

Blog Top List

Author's rights

Stuff (text, pics, movies) created by this author are in cases of commercial use, modified from viewmagazine's client base which does not affect their copyright. Please credit where used material on Outernet by linking or/and crediting to The Outernet/ viewmagazine.tv and its author. Passing of work here as your own infringes the author's rights